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Obama Worsening Afghan-Pak state
publication date: May 17, 2009
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author/source: Saudi Gazette
Obama worsening Afghan-Pak
state
Saudi Gazette - Internet
Edition
By Graham E. Fuller
For all the talk of "smart power,"
President Obama is pressing down the same path of failure in Pakistan marked out
by George Bush. The realities suggest need for drastic revision of US strategic
thinking.
Military force will not win the day in either Afghanistan or
Pakistan; crises have only grown worse under the US military
footprint.
The Taleban represent zealous and largely ignorant mountain
Islamists. They are also all ethnic Pashtuns. Most Pashtuns see the Taleban --
like them or not -- as the primary vehicle for restoration of Pashtun power in
Afghanistan, lost in 2001. Pashtuns are also among the most fiercely
nationalist, tribalized and xenophobic peoples of the world, united only against
the foreign invader. In the end, the Taleban are probably more Pashtun than they
are Islamist.
It is a fantasy to think of ever sealing the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The "Du rand Line" is an arbitrary imperial line
drawn through Pashtun tribes on both sides of the border. And there are twice as
many Pashtuns in Pakistan as there are in Afghanistan. The struggle of 13
million Afghan Pashtuns has already enflamed Pakistan's 28 million
Pashtuns.
India is the primary geopolitical threat to Pakistan, not
Afghanistan. Pakistan must therefore always maintain Afghanistan as a friendly
state. India furthermore is intent upon gaining a serious foothold in
Afghanistan - in the intelligence, economic and political arenas - that chills
Islamabad.
Pakistan will therefore never rupture ties or abandon the
Pashtuns, in either country, whether radical Islamist or not. Pakistan can never
afford to have Pashtuns hostile to Islamabad in control of Kabul, or at
home.
Occupation everywhere creates hatred, as the US is learning. Yet
Pashtuns remarkably have not been part of the jihadi movement at the
international level, although many are indeed quick to ally themselves at home
with Al-Qaeda against the US military.
The US had every reason to strike
back at the Al-Qaeda presence in Afghanistan after the outrage of 9/11. The
Taleban were furthermore poster children for an incompetent and harsh regime.
But the Taleban retreated from, rather than lost, the war in 2001, in order to
fight another day. Indeed, one can debate whether it might have been possible --
with sustained pressure from Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia and almost all other
Muslim countries that viewed the Taleban as primitives - to force the Taleban to
yield up Al-Qaeda over time without war. That debate is in any case now moot.
But the consequences of that war are baleful, debilitating and still
spreading.
The situation in Pakistan has gone from bad to worse as a
direct consequence of the US war raging on the Afghan border. US policy has now
carried the Afghan war over the border into Pakistan with its incursions, drone
bombings and assassinations - the classic response to a failure to deal with
insurgency in one country. Remember the invasion of Cambodia to save
Vietnam?
The deeply entrenched Islamic and tribal character of Pashtun
rule in the Northwest Frontier Province in Pakistan will not be transformed by
invasion or war. The task requires probably several generations to start to
change the deeply embedded social and psychological character of the area. War
induces visceral and atavistic response.
Pakistan is indeed now beginning
to crack under the relentless pressure directly exerted by the US. Anti-American
impulses in Pakistan are at high pitch, strengthening Islamic radicalism and
forcing reluctant acquiescence to it even by non-Islamists.
Only the
withdrawal of American and NATO boots on the ground will begin to allow the
process of near-frantic emotions to subside within Pakistan, and for the region
to start to cool down. Pakistan is experienced in governance and is well able to
deal with its own Islamists and tribalists under normal circumstances; until
recently, Pakistani Islamists had one of the lowest rates of electoral success
in the Muslim world.
But US policies have now driven local nationalism,
xenophobia and Islamism to combined fever pitch. As Washington demands that
Pakistan redeem failed American policies in Afghanistan, Islamabad can no longer
manage its domestic crisis.
The Pakistani army is more than capable of
maintaining state power against tribal militias and to defend its own nukes.
Only a convulsive nationalist revolutionary spirit could change that - something
most Pakistanis do not want. But Washington can still succeed in destabilizing
Pakistan if it perpetuates its present hard-line strategies. A new chapter of
military rule - not what Pakistan needs - will be the likely result, and even
then Islamabad's basic policies will not change, except at the cosmetic
level.
In the end, only moderate Islamists themselves can prevail over
the radicals whose main source of legitimacy comes from inciting popular
resistance against the external invader. Sadly, US forces and Islamist radicals
are now approaching a state of co-dependency.
It would be heartening to
see a solid working democracy established in Afghanistan. Or widespread female
rights and education - areas where Soviet occupation ironically did rather well.
But these changes are not going to happen even within one generation, given the
history of social and economic devastation of the country over 30
years.
Al-Qaeda's threat no longer emanates from the caves of the
borderlands, but from its symbolism that has long since metastasized to other
activists of the Muslim world. Meanwhile, the Pashtuns will fight on for a major
national voice in Afghanistan. But few Pashtuns on either side of the border
will long maintain a radical and international jihadi perspective once the
incitement of the US presence is gone. Nobody on either side of the border
really wants it.
What can be done must be consonant with the political
culture. Let non-military and neutral international organizations, free of
geopolitical taint, take over the binding of Afghan wounds and the building of
state structures. If the past eight years had shown ongoing success, perhaps an
alternative case for US policies could be made. But the evidence on the ground
demonstrates only continued deterioration and darkening of the prognosis. Will
we have more of the same? Or will there be a US recognition that the American
presence has now become more the problem than the solution? We do not hear that
debate.
Graham E. Fuller is a former CIA station chief in Kabul
and a former vice-chair of the CIA's National Intelligence Council. He is author
of numerous books on the Middle East, including "The Future of Political
Islam."
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